This
fall, an estimated 40,000 Bay Area bus riders will take an educational
journey through labor history, thanks to the SFSU Labor Archives and Research
Center.

"Our
Work Life," a series of murals and accompanying brochures traveling
on Sam Trans buses for two months starting on Labor Day, tell the stories
of workers in California during the past century. "They are intimate
stories that describe how people feel when they are doing their jobs --
their challenges and joys," says Susan Sherwood, acting director
of the Labor Archives. She and coworker Catherine Powell conducted extensive
background research for the project. They hope riders will come away with
increased respect for the jobs people do every day, as well as a boost
in the pride they take in their own work. Selected panels will be on display
concurrently at both SFSU's and City College's main library.

The traveling display was the brainchild of artistic team Kate Connell
(M.A., '97), a reference librarian at City College, and her husband,
Oscar Melara, a Sam Trans bus operator. Connell, who joined students at
SFSU and City College in interviewing the workers depicted on the panels,
says, "Most people who thought that there wasn't much to like about
their jobs had changed their minds by the end of the interviews."
The stories were often moving. "One person discovered by speaking
out loud that he was not a middle man but an advocate."

Connell
says. A woman who had been a labor commissioner in Guatemala and is now
a nanny decided "your work can't diminish who you are."

Other workers
in the exhibit include the first African American MUNI bus driver and
an SFSU alum who worked as a child laborer.

Readers are invited to the exhibit's opening reception on Labor Day, Sept.
6, from 1-5 p.m. at San Francisco's Ship Clerks Association ILWU Local
34, 4 Berry Street, next to SBC Park. One of the buses will be on site
for visitors to view the complete series of panels inside.

The exhibit was made possible by grants from the Creative Work Fund, Peninsula
Community Foundation, Zellerbach Family Fund, and the LEF Foundation.